69,556 research outputs found
Using a Cruise Report to Generate XML Metadata
Since 2005 metadata generation at the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping/Joint Hydrographic Center has slowly evolved from a painful and tedious process of copying and pasting, to generate hundreds of files, to using an automated system that generates 90% of the needed metadata from the data collected on cruises. However there remained one piece missing to the automated system- the wordy part of the metadata that deals with information such as the attribute accuracy report, abstract and the process description. This information cannot be mined from the raw survey data. This paper illustrates how to generate a template from a Microsoft Word based cruise report that can be used in conjunction with another template (generated from the raw data collected on a cruise) to create XML metadata ready for submission to the NOAA/National Geophysical Data Center
Five challenges to the future of transboundary water governance
This repository item contains a single issue of Issues in Brief, a series of policy briefs that began publishing in 2008 by the Boston University Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future.Pardee 2013 Graduate Summer Fellow Leeann Sullivan uses the Okavango River in Southern Africa as a case study to discuss the key challenges of the future of transboundary water governance. She argues that while local-level management has been successful thus far, climate change and rapid socio-economic development pose basin-wide challenges that communities cannot address alone. By creating a regional framework to help communities tackle issues of communication, governance, financial stability, resource allocation, and data management, water managers may be able to strengthen political and environmental resilience in the basin. She concludes that lessons drawn from the integration of management systems in the Okavango could inform practices for sustainable water management in a more global context
Approximating Ropelength by Energy Functions
The ropelength of a knot is the quotient of its length by its thickness. We
consider a family of energy functions for knots, depending on a power p, which
approach ropelength as p increases. We describe a numerically computed trefoil
knot which seems to be a local minimum for ropelength; there are nearby
critical points for the p-energies, which are evidently local minima for large
enough p.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, LaTe
Nickel Cadmium Charge Control Concepts
The design and testing of charge control concepts for several power systems is presented. The design of the CRAM charge control system for the SAS satellites and the design of the battery charge regulator for the AMPTE satellites is reviewed. Another charge control concept examined is for the OPEN program and its use of a microprocessor. The use of the voltage limiter is also discussed
The Intersection of Free Speech and the Legal Profession: Constraints on Lawyers\u27 First Amendment Rights
Campaign for a Moral, Balanced Immigration Overhaul (CAMBIO), Strategic Review
In March 2014, Campaign for an Accountable, Moral, and Balanced Immigration Reform (CAMBIO) commissioned us to conduct an external review of the CAMBIO campaign. This report summarizes findings based on data gathered during an in-person focus group conducted with members of the CAMBIO Steering Committee in May 2014; a review of approximately 20 CAMBIO corporate documents and 36 internal meeting minutes; and 41 semi-structured telephone interviews conducted principally in June and July 2014
Study of early nausea and vomiting response of swine to ionizing radiation Final technical progress report, 15 Sep. - 12 Dec. 1969
Early nausea and vomiting response of swine to ionizing radiation related to radiation dosage and effect on humans in space mission
Cubic Polyhedra
A cubic polyhedron is a polyhedral surface whose edges are exactly all the
edges of the cubic lattice. Every such polyhedron is a discrete minimal
surface, and it appears that many (but not all) of them can be relaxed to
smooth minimal surfaces (under an appropriate smoothing flow, keeping their
symmetries). Here we give a complete classification of the cubic polyhedra.
Among these are five new infinite uniform polyhedra and an uncountable
collection of new infinite semi-regular polyhedra. We also consider the
somewhat larger class of all discrete minimal surfaces in the cubic lattice.Comment: 18 pages, many figure
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